Introduction:
For twenty-five
years I have been writing a quartet of poetry books inspired by the
four elements and collectively titled QUINTESSENCE. The first
is A Drowning Man is Never Tall Enough, which was published
in 1990 by the University of Georgia Press. The second is (reading
a burning book), published in 1994 by Basfal Books. The third
book, Feeding the Fear of the Earth, was published by Many
Mountains Moving Press in 2006. The fourth, Breathe a Word of It, is
completed and seeking a publisher.
The overall
structure for the books has provided him with a vessel to pursue some
innovative, poly-lectical approaches and an opportunity to explore
recurring, spiraling themes.
Following
is a brief description of the four books:
A
Drowning Man is Never Tall Enough (University of Georgia
Press, 1990)
T
h e w a t e r b o o k
When
Marcel Duchamp learned his painting on glass "Bride Stripped
Bare by Her Bachelors, Even" had cracked, he replied, "At
last, the painting is complete." A Drowning Man is Never Tall
Enough represents work that intentionally explores its own cracks,
the spaces between self and the world, the spaces between lyric
and story. The collection is a shattered narrative which tries
to capture the changing shape of consciousness: from self-consciousness
(dense with desire) to a consciousness (a discourse between body
and mind) to a world-consciousness (language interacting with self
and world).
The
book strives for a language open to possibility and risk, going
beyond the linear and logical. The poems attempt to capture the
fragmentation of self and culture. And in the process they strive
to go beyond the self-contained and consuming, and open out into
other worlds where the “I” is not present. Always the
questions: How to go beyond the draining solipsistic voice? How
to connect? How to tell the story of the crack? How to tell a story
with cracks?
How
to tell the story that is drowning us?
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(reading
a burning book) (Basfal Books, 1994)
T
h e f i r e b o o k
This
is a book-length poem divided into ten sections: (sleep), (silence),
(breath), (words), (water), (death), (food), (love), (light), (dreams).
It was written with the intention to reduce everything to the essential.
The sections explore dividedness and desire, connection and clarity,
while focusing on issues related to the environment, gender, and
language. Throughout, the struggle is for meaning. The sections
spiral into one another achieving a liquid structure built out
of questions and creating a current of voices: the personal, the
historical, the poetic, and the philosophical.
The
titles of the sections are meant to suggest what is essential,
what is necessary, what is critical for our survival. The poem
explores the potential of a number of images (hunger, dance, light)
and gathers a number of voices (poets, theorists, feminists, artists,
activists) in an effort to catch the words on fire, to have ideas
and emotions come together in a fire-weaving--to hold a fire where
one expects to hold a book.
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Feeding
the Fear of the Earth (Many Mountains Moving, 2006)
T
h e e a r t h b o o k
The
major concern of this collection is ecological, and it is structured
through a series of titles alluding to various historical figures
in unusual contexts. The central theme and vision of the book is
interconnectedness. The titles of the various poems reflect conflict,
interrelationship, and a “re-contextualization” of
ideas. The poems themselves strive to challenge preconceived boundaries:
time, cultures, disciplines, gender, race, genre. They are essentially
dialectical, working within the conflicts and syntheses created
by the tensions invoked in the titles.
This
collection is the most overtly political and historical of the
four books.
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Breathe
a Word of It
T
h e a i r b o o k
In
an effort to avoid arriving at a contrived conclusion for the series,
this collection rethinks the structure of a book. To circumvent
the linear sense of destination, the poems in Breathe a word of
It are organized from the center. They unfold around an embracing
space. The book is structured from the middle. The pages are meant
to be unnumbered, and companion poems unfold from the center. The
center poem is “breathing/ cave.” The first poem in
the book and the last poem are titled “Wonder.” And
there are various companion poems (“Inhale”—“Exhale” etc.)
that open up on both sides of the central poem.
This
structure suggests some obvious organic metaphors—labia,
petals, lungs, caves—and suggests that we must re-immerse
ourselves in the physical world. The title of the book suggests
the themes which have been engaged in the three previous books,
the movement from the subjective to the objective to the trans-subjective
(breath as both spiritual and physical).
To
capture the sense of breathing, each poem is written as if it were
inhaling and exhaling. Shorter lines alternate with prose lines,
so each poem looks as if it were alternating between fullness and
emptiness, between taking all in and leaving all out. This affects
the rhythms of the poems and visually captures the themes of the
book.
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QUINTESSENCE
Finally,
the combination of the four books will be gathered under a collective
title which will provide a space, an alembic, in which the elements
interact. The title of the completed project is QUINTESSENCE suggesting
that in the combination of the four elements a fifth essence is
formed.